Colonel Monroe Shipe-Hyde
Park
Peter
Mansbendel's father-In-Law was Col. Monroe Shipe. Col. Shipe developed
the first planned suburban community in Austin in 1891 know as "Hyde
Park". Investors from Kansas City bought the old fairgrounds
in Austin in 1890. When Monroe Shipe purchased the property in 1891,
he initially intended to build a rail yard to serve the MKT rail
line anticipated to arrive shortly. But Shipe grew impatient and
changed his plans when rail construction lagged. His new idea included
building a residential community called Hyde Park in this outlying
area which would be connected to the city by a street rail line
that he would also build.
Shipe's task was enormous, but he successfully surmounted every
challenge. Battling opposition from other streetcar operators, he
had his own line in service by February 1891. He convinced the city
to erect its first moonlight tower in Hyde Park. He installed water
mains in the area as well as gas lines, electricity, and fire hydrants.
He paid for construction of the Speedway as a connecting road between
Hyde Park and downtown. Shipe even planted trees along the roads
built in his new neighborhood. The plan worked. Attracted by inexpensive
land and the prospect of living in a healthful, wholesome neighborhood,
people flocked to purchase Shipe's lots. But not all were welcome.
Early advertisements for Hyde Park clearly stated that land would
be sold only to whites. 
According to neighborhood history, Hyde Park lots were 25 feet wide
and sold for $110.00 - $10.00 down and $5.00 a month. Anyone who
purchased two lots and built on them, within a year was entitled
to a third lot free. To attract buyers, Shipe, who also began the
Austin Street Railway Company, extended the streetcar line to his
development and provided graded streets, city utilities, built the
first school, and paid the teachers' salaries and free mail delivery.
Hyde Park was said to be "the most beautiful and healthful
spot in Austin." He claimed that "no city west of Boston
can boast of finer drives than are in Hyde Park."
In Hyde Park's early decades, the neighborhood conveyed the feel
of a town separate from Austin. Shipe originally numbered the east-west
streets 1st Street through 8th Street, street names already in use
in downtown Austin. As the area added churches, schools, and grocery
stores, residents found less occasion to travel into town. The open,
undeveloped nature of the landscape between Hyde Park and the city
limits heightened the sensation of traveling between two separate
communities.
As Austin engulfed and surrounded Hyde Park, neighborhood identity
remained strong. Even today residents display strong commitment
to maintaining the unique flavor of their area of town. Recent battles
with city government over the local fire station and with Hyde Park
Baptist Church regarding church expansion have illustrated that
Hyde Park residents understand and appreciate the historic value
of Austin's first planned suburban community.
Hyde Park, was listed in the National Register of Historic Places
in 1991 by the U.S. Department of the Interior, it was platted in
1891 by Colonel Monroe Shipe.
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